Democratic Sentinel, Volume 8, Number 28, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 8 August 1884 — Page 7

WARTS AND MOLES.

How to Exterminate These Pests of Pretty Paces. An old nonk is credited with saying that the one ambition of woman is a pretty face, and for that charm will she risk life and defy death. When the influence es a pretty face is taken into consideration, it is not hard to believe that most any woman will do anything and try everything to secnre it. A pretty faee is a fortune, and if there is any possible chance of attaining the one or securing the other nine women out of every ten are willing to take that chance. No long ago a man from Barcelona established himself in Chicago, and, seeming letters to a few popular families, succeeded in building np a reputation that gave promise of a princely in some. He circulated among the wealthier classes and treated women in their own private apartments, and in less than a month had collected $6,000. He did 1 tile mischief, but the torture he subjected hi> freckled patients to wonld have made him a valuable adjunct to the Spanish inquisitors. One young woman paid him sls an hour for treating the saucy little freckles that dotted her pretty nose. Mademoiselle was tied in a chair and her nose plugged np with bits of sponge saturated with ether. When sufficiently stupefied, the man went to work with a knife and literally skinned her entire face. A solution of diluted muriatic acid was then applied to the raw sitrface, and the screams of the poor little fool could be heard all over the bouse. But mamma had decided on her girl’s success as a debutante, and she gave directions to have her under narcotic’s for a couple of days. The next step was to cut the brown pigments right out of the flesh. They came out, too, and the face healed up, but the young woman’s constitution has been completely undermined, and neither doctor nor nurse has been able to find out what ails her. Another patron, who worried her empty little head about meeting eyebrows submitted to a plucking, and as each individual hair had to be plucked out by tiie root it was fully three weeks before the bridge of her nose was uncovered; hut the operation cost her $..00. The friend to whom she recommended her artist was less successful. She was troubled with a hollow neck, hut prided herself upon her satiny skm, which, however, could not be displayed owing to the unsightly depression between her throat and collar. The man applied a suction-pump and undertook to blow out the hollow. An attack was made on one side of the depression, but the result was so far in excess of expectation that the woman was horrified at her deformity and became so obstreperous that Senor Moth-and-freckle-ex-terminator fled the town, and has never been seen or heard of since, 'lhe now sadly adiieted belle sought a strange doctor, who treated her for goitre, and kept her so long nnder a coat of iodine that she is marked for the next ten years w.th the ineradicable yellow. The value of good looks must be fully appreciated when women of this century have recourse to this heroic treatment. Verily, there is no such element as unalloyed happiness, and if a woman have fine teeth, good hair, bright eyes, and a patrician nose, there is certain to he a mole, wart, pimple, birthmark, discoloration, moth, patch, hepatica-spot, hives, prickly-heat, or some similar blemish which, although hut skin-deep, suffices to make her existence a bore. The worst of the matter is, that as soon as the bete noire is attacked, myriads before unseen present themselves, and the case becomes so hopeless that Miss Speckleface throws away her handglass and devotes her wits to the pow-der-puff and rouge-pot, determined to cover np the blemishes that, like the sins of her forefathers, cannot be eradicated. This is after all, as it should be, for thirty days’ fretting are more disastrous to youth and beauty than a bushel of skin eruptions. I here is one foe to beauty, however, which nothing short of a mask will cover, and that is the little wart or mole, made doubly hideous by the tuft of hair, which sometimes grows to be two inches long. That this defect is a thorn in the flesh, any woman so afflicted can testily, and there really is no jeeason why the irritation should be endured. Any woman who cares for appearances can certainly take time to pull out the hairs. To be sure, more will grow, hut they can he watched and plucked out also as soon as they reach the surface. If this simpler operation is continued—daily, if necessary—the roots will one by one yield, and finally the growth will cease. Now take a piece of strong, fine twist, tie it securely around' the mole, and, as circulation is thus cut off, decomposition will set in and in two weeks the annoyance will disappear.

A Modern Prophet.

The test of a science is the ability to predict. We believe the astronomer, because he is able to foretell within the fraction of a second when an eclipse will begin and when it will end. We put faith in the chemist, also, for we find by experience that, when he puts certain atoms of matter together, a certain result is sure to follow. Water, for instance, is composed of two gases, oxygen ami hydrogen. Spiritualism is discredited, because its prophets and mediums cannot foretell. Some of the sciences are so far impel feet that its professors cannot predict with oonfi dence. We know a great deal about the weather, for instance, but the Washington Weather Bureau is ofren mistaken in ts forecasts. Much has been sa d as to the possibility of founding a science of society; but it is conceded that, as yet, the sociologists have not dared to claim they could read the future. All this is apropos of a person who has appeared in Ohio, who makes a claim that he has discovered the law which shows the variations in the prices of commodities. His name is Samuel Benner. He published a book in 1875, in which he made a forecast of the prices of iron, grain, hogs, and cotton, up to the year 1891. It must be confessed that he has so far proved remarkably accurate, He said the price of iron would be lowest in 1877—that it would advance and be at its maximum in lfcßi- and that it would then

shrink in value until 1887 or *BB. This forecast has not been proved false np to date. Aocording to the hypothesis of this modern prophet of prices, the market value of prices tells the story of the prosperity or otherwise of a given period. When iron is in demand aud its price is advancing, there is a business boom nnder way, and vice ve sa. Iron is the key to the industrial s tuation, for when there is work to do tools are required. Now Mr. Benner argue* that the variations in the price of iron are subject to a law of periodicity. Panics occur in periods varying from eighteen to twenty-one years. For instance, we had them in 1887, 1857, and 1673, and the next one is dne in 1891. The really prosperous years, according to Mr. Benner, are very few. The boom lasts only for a brief period. The intervening years are a record of depressed business and general suffering. If there is anything in Mr. Benner’s theory, men in business are justified in engaging in new enterprises wheu the price of iron is advancing; bat they suould be careful when the iron industry is under a cloud.—Demores t’s Monthly.

A Huge Electric Battery.

In erecting the great Statue of Liberty, two things had to be considered that Beem very trifling, and yet, if negLcted, might destroy the statue in one day, or cause it to crumble slowly to pieces. One is the sun, the other is the sea breeze. Either of these could destroy the great copper figure, and something must be done to prevent such a disaster. The heat of the snn would expand the metal and pull it out of shape, precisely as it does pull the Brooklyn Bridge out of shape every day. The bridge is made in four Earts, and when they expand with the eat of the sun they slide one past the other, and no harm is done. The river span rises and falls day and night, as heat and cold alternate. The great copper statue is likewise in two parts, the frame-work of iron and the copper covering; and while they are securely fastened together they can move one over the other. Each bolt will slip a trifle as the copper expands in the hot August sunshine, and slide back again when the freezing winds blow and the vast figure shrinks together in the cold. Besides this, ftie copper surface is so thin and elastic that it will bend slightly when heated, yet keep its general shape. The salff air blowing in from the sea has thin fingers and a bitter, biting tongue. If it finds a crack where it can creep in between the copper surface and the iron skeleton, there will be trouble at once. These metals do not agree together, and where there is salt moisture in the air they seem to quarrel more bitterly than ever. It seems that every joining of points of copper and iron snakes a tiny battery, and so faint shivers of electricity would run through all the statue, slowly corroding and eating it into dust. This curious, silent, and vet sure destruction must be prevented, and so every joint throughout the statue, wherever copper touches iron, must be protected with little rags stuffed between the metals to keep them from quarreling. It is the same wUerever two different metals touch each other. Imagine what a tremendous battery the Liberty wonld make, with its tons of copper suiface and monstrous skeleton of iron. However, a little care prevents all danger, as provision will be made, of course, for keeping the metals from touching each other.— u The Bartholdi Statue,” by Charles Barnard, in St. Nicholas.

Moths.

Always in the spring, after beating, cleaning, and a grand airing, take the woolen clothes in while the sun is on them, and put away, with as little folding as possible, in large chests, lined with thick paper, and plenty of gum camphor in rather large pieces among the layers. I hope to see the large wooden chests for storage form part of our outfits as they were of our grandmothers'. Boxes are much better to keep clothes in than leather trunks are, and a set made of cedar, or lined with the veneers of that wood, built very large to receive clothes without much folding, would be better than cedar closets, especially if there is a dry attic to store them in. One chest for blankets, one for men’s clothing, and one for women’s, Bhould be part of the .family plenishing, and descend as heirlooms after the sensible custom of our ancestors. Furs keep best in the new barrels made from paper pulp, which can be sealed up to wholly exclude moths. If you must store them without any such convenience, beat them thoroughly on the inside, brush the fur well, put into a clean large paper bag which you get from the grocers, with lumps of camphor in the pockets and folds, and paste the top of the bag closely. Keep each article so sealed, in a separate bag, in a box or trunk. This work should always be done as soon as you are through wearing furs and woolens. Moths seldom attack things in constant use, but seize their chance if articles are left in closet or trunk for a fortnight unguarded. Don’t leave your winter dresses and the boys’ clothes, hanging in unused closets or the attic, half the summer. Beside moths, the ants, wasps, and flies will gnaw holes in them, dust gathers, and light fades them. The waste of clothes comes nearly as much from neglect as from use. —Wide Awake.

They are sowing in some places in the West a “drought-proof” w'grass,”; Borghum halapense, which sendk its roots down into the ground after moisture from three to twelve feet. It is proof against freezing, flooding, and continued drought. If cut when the plant is in bloom it makes very good hay, and the roots are greedily devoured by hogs. In rich soil it grows sometimes to the height of ten feet. I know not which I love the most, Hor which the cornel est bows. The timid, bssWui violet, Or the toyrtl-heJrtod rose. The pansy ia tier purple dress, The pink v. ith cheek of red. Or the taint, fair heliotrope, who hangs, Like a bashtnl maid, her head. For I love and prise yon one and all. From the le st low bloom of si ring To the 1 ly fair, whose clothes ontsoine The raiment of a king. —P. Cary.

Utilizing Waste.

Dirt, it has been well said, is only "matter out of place.” The waste of large cities, which occasions so much disease, can be so manipulated as to add to the fertility of the soil and increase the well-being of mankind. The amazing growth of cities in the modern world is forcing upon ns the consideration of sanitary problems unheeded by onr fathers. It was considered in former generations a simple enough matter to convey sewage through pipes or oocduits to some neighboring river or bay; bat as the city grew and its sewage increased, the waters became poisoned, and the once healthful shores were made the seat of all manner of fonl diseases. The Biver Thames was at one time a nuisance dne to the filth of the English metropolis which was poured into it. The same was true of the Seine in Paris. In both great cities gigantic public works had to be constructed to oonvey the sewage to distant farm lands. Certain arid and strongly mineralized soils were rendered wonderfully fruitful by the sewage of London and Paris. The sewers of the latter city are among the wonders of the world. An army can he marched to any part of Pasis by making use of the underground passages. In this country we have paid far less attention to this important matter than it deserves. Cities with us have grown so rapidly that the requirements of sanitary science have been overlooked in our haste to profit by improvements. It is only recently that Boston has built a great sewer to discharge the foul accumulation of that growing city into the ocean, yet it is admitted that this is sheer waste, as the sewage might be utilized to render fertile great tracts of land west and north of tue city. New York City, although surrounded by water, with two swift rivers on either side of it, is most imperfectly sewered. The health maps of the metropolis show largo areas where fever and diphtheria claim a steady crop of victims due to dammedup streams, dishonest plumbing, and imperfect sewerage. The central government has had to interfere also to prevent the reckless citizens of New York from ruining their noble harbor by dumping their garbage and debris into the channels used by deeply laden steamships, whose coming and going enrich that city. Some of the younger communities realize the importance of this matter. Any one who visits the town of Pullman, near Chicago, will notice that the great Corliss engine, which attracted so much attention at the Philadelphia Centennial, is made use of in that artistically la d out city, to pump the sewage to farm lands three miles away. This example is worthy of following. The greatest of modern benefactors are those who are insisting upon the necessity of sanitary reform. He who puts dirt in its plaoe —who rids a neighborhood of a center of fever affection, who improves the plumbing of houses, and thus adds to the general health of the community—is the real philanthropist of our age, the true friend of humanity.—Demorest’s Monthly.

The California Lilies.

The California Horticulturist thus speaks of the native lilies: “The mountain children whom one meets on their way to school in the morning load themselves down with what they call ‘Tiger Lilies,* or, in other words, Lilium Humboldtii, whose spires flash out with wonderful brilliancy around the bases of volcanic rocks, or near shattered ledges, or on the hard red clay of the hillsides. One of our authors, who studies with loving and analytic mind the colors, and sounds, and meanings of the Sierra woods, has called it ‘camelian-hued,’ with its orange and amber ground, veined with black. In favorable places we have found lily-stems as tall as a man. The bulbs are deep down, and not easily dug out. Some insect bores into and ruins many a choice bud. This lily loves company, being always found in groups. # Where you see one yellow flash, you may be sure there are others near. After blossoming time is over*) the stalks disappear very quickly. By following np the long ridges, blossoms may be found in perfection for several months. The same is true of the lovely white lily, L. Washingtonianum. Both species are in perfection in Nevada County. ”

The California Twining Hyacinth.

The Twining Hyacinth is a wonderfully singular and beautiful plant, which grows among the mountains of California. It twines itself into and around every bush or shrub within its reach, and does not stop climbing till its slender stem has reached the top of its support, even if it should be ten feet high. When it has gained the top, it seems to rest for a while, as if to look abopt it and feel sure of its position, and men lets go its hold upon the earth, and without any connection with the ground, or any sustenance from it, goes on blooming and ripening its seed, month after month, no more affected, apparently, by the scorching licit of the sun by day, nor the chill of the mountain air by night, than if it had an anchoring root like an oak tree. The leaves are long and narrow, resembling blades of grass; the flowers are a fine pink, or deep rose color, any as you may judge from the picture, vers beautiful. This strange plant bloomd constantly from May to September.

A Remarkable Myrtaceous Plant.

One of the most remarkable trees, whidhiwas pointed out to me, is the Bata, & Metrosideros M. robusta. This, though a myrtaceous plant, has all the hab ts of the Indian figs, reproducing them in the closest manner. It starts from a seed dropped in the fork of a tree, and grows downward to reach the ground, then taking root there and ganing strength, chokes the supporting tree, and entirely destroys it, forming a large trunk by fusion of its many stems. Nevertheless, it occasionally grows originally directly from the soil, and then forms a trunk more regular in form. Another, Metrosideros M. florid a, is a regular climber. —Notes of a naturalist on the “Challenger The orchid epidendum cilare smells precisely like roasted apples.

Heavenly Blue.

All women and painters admire the color known as blue. And this general admiration cannot but provoke comment when it is realized that there is, with the except on of the skj, less of bine in nature than of any other color. It conveys to the mind but one idea, that of purity; and the value of the virtue seems to be shadowed forth in the color. Painters of all ages have delighted in robing loving Madonnas, pale saints, and angelic cherubs in various shades of this wonderful color. There are few blue flowers, and not many blue birds or fishes, while real blue eyes, supposed to be seen every day, are really anomalies in nature which, if possessed, it is not believed would be beautiful The Koman love for blue was such that it came to signify “beautiful,” and to impurple (for it was called purple or blue) meant to make beautiful. The early Britons evidently shared this taste in conjunction with the Romans, because they tattooed their bodies in blue, and were so proud of displaying them that “beauty unadorned” was the favorite mode of dress among them. Fra Angelico worked with ardor years and years before attaining the shade of blue that has made his name famous; and when, after much toil, the Bummun bonum in tints was reached, he thought his time had been well Bpent. It is, of course, well known that “blue blood” does not exist, doctors telling us that the veins most perceptible in white, slender hands are gray, red, or green. One cannot discourse of the “green blood of his ancestors,” so that nothing remains save to know better than one talks. But, after all, the sky, the cornflower, and the air are all "of this heavenly tint—and are they not three good things in nature? We look at the unfathomable mass of blue and dream of rest therein—we pluck the tiny flower and feel that beauty is grasped—we inhale the pure, sweet air, and are conscious that health comes with it. In the old pictures and poems (why do we separate them when they are one?' blue told of pure, calm love—never of excitement or passion. The Madonnas are robed in blue, the Magdalenes in purple. Marguerite going to church is clothed in a blue kirtle, while Marguerite, tempted and betrayed, is in black or purple. In the hand of a dead baby we may place a white lily and a blue forget-me-not, but never a red rose. Blue, the shade of the heavens, is appropriately intrusted to those who are heavenward-bound.

A Government Sheriff.

Mr. Edward L. Green, Sheriff, Auckland, New Zealand, writes: “I received an injury to my shoulder in June, 1882, and from that date until July, 1883, I could not use my arm. I applied to medical men and used all sorts of liniment without any benefit. I have great pleasure in stating I had occasion to use St. Jacobs Oil for it, and I had not used it more than ten minutes before 1 felt the beneficial effect, and I can work with my saw or spade as well as ever I did, and recommend it to any one Buffering pain. ”

Flowers.

A walk along the streets of any of onr small villages in the summer or autumn months will fill any one with pleasure to see the abundance of flowers of various kinds and varieties decorating almost overy dooryard, whether large or small, all the inmates of the house indulging in a taste for the loveliest of nature’s beauties. We always experience a great respect for such, aud feel grateful to all who may add something to the charms of everyday life that will make people better and happier, and trust the time is not far distant when the custom will become universal in town and country—and go where we will, we see flowers. We know some men who are enjoying these blessings—they neither appreciate nor deserve, they try to show their manhood by contempt of these beauties, but fortunately they are remnants of a race almost extinct. Men of brains and culture are helpers in the good work, and nobly aid in making homes beautiful, bright and pleasant. And the children will learn to plant and take care of flowers, and by having these fair and beautiful things about them they will acquire a taste and refinement which will sweeten and beautify all their lives and the result in the great future no one is wise enough to tell.

Higher Prices for Butter.

All dairymen who use Wells Richardson & Co’s Improved Butter Color agree that. It Increases tnc value of butter several cents a pound, jtis pure and harmless, convenient lor In tint use, h„s no la te or odor, and gives a clear, goldetl richness to the b t er. It 1 1 the very be.?t butter color obta nable, and Is not expensive. In eve y irtate In the Union the demand for it la injreas.ng. "Are the sails on the ship of state mads from the Pres.dential canvass/" aslcs u young statesman from Brooklyn. —New York Tin.es. The very remarkable climatic eccentricities, if so they may be termed, that have lately attracted attention the world over, are typically exemplified in the last winter season about Btavangov, Norway, where, in latitude 58 deg. 58 min., or only one degree south of the extremity of Greenland, the thermometer but once during the month of January fell to the freezing point. The grass plots of the various gardens are described as having been practically as green as in summer; “daisies, snowdrops, pansies, violet*, and primroses had their blossoms well set; peonies appeared above the ground, and manv roses had thrown out vigorous Bhoots.” —The American.

Lots of People

get bilious, ha e hea y headaches, mouth oul, jollow o os etc., ail the direc Result oi mpure blood which eau be ihirougbly cleansed, renewe I, and enriched with K idneyWort. It acts at the same time on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, an 1 has more real virtue in a package than <an be found,in any other remedy for the same clavs o. diseases. If you were doomed to the stake, would you have a p.o.erence? Ves; I would prefer a beef-steak.

Horsford’s Acid Phosphate.

BEWARE OP IMITATIONS. Imitations and counterfeits have again appeared. I e sure that the word * Hom.or.l e ' js on the wraprter. None gcnu'nc wi hout It. "I look oi t for number won,” says tho young speou a or wno scans a lottery list.— A etc Yvrn CommcntjU Advertiser.

Ladies of all a je« who suffer from loss of appetite, from imperfe tdlgestlon, low -plrlts and nervous debility, mav have health nns*ed and life extended by the use of Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkbam's remedies for all com plaints specially Incident to the fema'e constitution. Even the homeliest n an, when assisting a fellow passenger to put his nickel In the stroot-car box, is p&ss.ng tare. — FitbtUuryh Chrvtucu- Tcieyiv ph . Cr~KEEP in the Fashion.— The Diamond Tyes always do more than they claim to do. Color ovor that old dross. It will look like new. '} hev aro \va ranted. 10c. at drug-lets’. Wells, Richardson * t 0., Purlin ton, Vt. Whv are the human race like an au<v tloncer's good*. Because they are always going, going, gone.

A Cure of Pneumonia.

Mr. D. H. Rarnaby, of Owego, N. Y., says that his daughter was taken with a violent oold which terminated with | nouraonia, and all tho best physicians gave the case up and said she could live but a few hours at most. She was in this condition when a friend recommended Dr. Wm. Halls Balsam for the Lungs, and advised her to try It. She accepted It as a last resort, and was surprised to find that It produced a marked change for the better, and by persevering a permanent cure was effected.

Young Men, Read This.

The Voi/taic Bdi.T C of Marshall, Mich., offer to send their oelebrutcd Bdkotiio Vontaic Belt and other Elkctkic Appliances on trial for thirty days, to men lyoungor old a.iiicted with nervous debility, loss of Vita Ity and manhood, and all kind ed troub es. Also for rheumatism, neuralgia, paralysis. und many ot ler dheases. Complete e toration to health, vigor, and inanh >od uaran cod. No risk is Incurred, as thirty days’ trial s allowed. Write them at onco for illustrated painph'ot, free. 1

Three Remarkable Interviews.

A reporter lias interviewed Hon. Wm. D. Ko'ley. M. 0.; Hon. Judge l<hinders, of New York: and T. 8. Arthur, in regard o the r experience with Compound Oxygen. Th> se Int rviews give surprising resul s and show his treatment for the cure of chronic dist a e* to be most remarkable. A copy of these 1 tervlews, also a Trcatlro Oil Compound Oxygen, will bo ma led fr o by D s Biarkey & Paten, llO.i Gira d st., Philadelphia.

“Put up” at the Gault House.

The businoss man or tourist will find firstclass nocommodations at the low prloo of S 3 and $2.50 per day at the Gault Houso, Chicago, corner Clinton and Madison streets. This far-famed hotel Is located In the contor of tho city, only one block lrotn tho Union Doi>ot. Elevator; all appointments first-class. H. W. Hovt, Proprietor. In tho Book of Martyis we road of tho agonies of uieu who suhered for their fattu, and in our work-a-day experience wo learn tne degree of pain which it 1b possiulo lor tho hannul frame to enduro. Rev. Wm. P. Corb.t, D. lb, of Now Haven, alter years of suffer ng from the most excruciating rhe. nutie torturos, was immediately cu ed by Athlophoros. Price, fel per bottle. If your druggist husn t It, send to Athlophoros bo., 1 ill Wad S.reet, N. Y. Hay-Frveh. I oan recommend Ely’s Cream aim to all Hay-Fever sufferers; It Is. In my opinion, a sure cure. 1 was a Meted for twenty-five yearp, and never before found permanent relief.—W. H. Haskins, Marthfiold, Vt.

For dyspepsia, indigestion, depression of spirits, and genera) debility In their various forms; also, as a previ ntive against fever and ague, and ether Intermittent fevers, the •‘Ferro-Phosphorated Elixir of Ca it ay a,” made by Caswell, Hazard & Co., of New V ork, and sold by all druggists. Is tho best tonio; and lor patients recovering from fever or other sickness it has no equal. Hay-Fevek. 1 have been a Huy Fever sufferer for threo years have often hoard Ely’s Cream Balm spoken of in tho highest terns. 1 used it and w.th the moit wonderful success.—T. 8. User, fljracuto, N. Y. "Rough on Rats." Clears (rat rats, mice, files, roaches, bed-bugs, ants, vermin, chipmunks. 16c. The solvent, properties of crude oil are so well established that It Is unnecessary to quote examples. CarbMlne Is made from crude oil devoid of smell, and Is guaranteed to remove scurf and dandruff. "Rough on Itch” cures humors, eruptions, ringworm, tetter, salt rheum, frosted feet, chilblains. Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh Is a certain curs for that very obnoxious disease. ••B mhu-Palba.” Quick, complete oure, all annoying kidney and urinary diseases. sl. The increasing sales of Piso’s Oure attest Its claim as tho.best cough rernady. “Rough on Corns.” 15c. Ask for it. Complete oure, bard or soft corns, warts, bunions.

GErSkS FOR FAIN. Rheumatism,Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache. Headache, Toothache, ■ore Th root, ■ well I ugs, Mprwlas, Braises, Boras. Meolda. Pros! Biles, ASB ILL OTIIKU MIDILT FAIKB AID ACHCS. ■SI M Draolau ul Dnlinmrrvbin. Flftj Oseua lotus. Direction! Is II (.aaguiqm. Til* CUAUI.es A. VOCEI.KR CO. _ S—IMA. fOUSUSACQ.I H«lll—r». M4..C,LL * Jdht ..LYDIA I. PINKHAM’B* * * VEGETABLE COMPOUND J • • • 18 A POSITIVE CURE FOR • • • s tw/R til those painful Complaints * refill ’and Weakn«*»c» so common* * /jpTffIKWL » » **» oto par hoot «»«»«< •/jUjPs** * FEE ALB POPULATION.* o * ’ hnpgiOlMlmiphs, it oUimsto do,thousands of ladissoan gladly testfry. • * Bond ntamn to Lvnn, Hass., tor pamphlet. Letters of A aim WANTED for the beet and fastest-selling Pictorial Books an I bl .lea. Pries* reduced 88 per cent Natioeal Vqblmhiho Co.. OhJcago, 81. KIDDER’S P«BTHtEB!SS!,?A ■■■■■■■■■■■■■fChaxlestowii, Mas*. ■ - A hIA» THE mm.MIA or y. -y ! | th. muulon of wullh end A j’/JSljTYth I lath.lltu. ootug, span th. kill V .W/SiffWxiVa 1 ■>**•’• Fwxl lllnnc Inn b. tpIJ ,U iff Parent. It b nourUbin., inthfrW, TKffilsilS&A-rASL Mw}bpr»p««l In . ft* mlnutu. ,\ i ElliV £*U dtwetlow nwoniptny Mchann *tr •‘ U V V ,0»., Pnlnwr, his., for Funphtai.

DR. JOHN BOLL’S Smitl’sTnicSfH FOR THE OURE OF FEVER and AGUE Or CHILLS and FEVER, RID ALL MALARIAL DISEASES The proprietor of this celebrated medicine justly olaims for it a superiority over all remedies ever offered to the public for the SAFE, CERTAIN, SPEEDY and PERMANENT oure of Ague and Fever, or Chills and Fever, whether of short or long standing. Ho refers to the entire Western and Southern country to bear him testimony the truth of the assertion that in no cate whatever will it fail to core if the directions are striotly followed and carried oat. In a great many eases a single dose has been anfficient for a oure, and whole families have been oured by a single bottle, with a perfeot restoration of the general health. It is, however, prudent, ana in every case more certain to cure, if its use is oontinued in smaller doses for a week or two after the disease has been oheoked, more especially in diffloult and long-standing oases. Usually this medicine will not require any aid to keep the bowels in good order. Should the patient, however, require a cathartic medicine, after having taken three or four doses of the Tonio, a single dope of BULL’S VEGETABLE FAMILY FILLS will be sufficient. BULL’S SARSAPARILLA is the old and reliable remedy for impurities of the blood and Sorofulous affieouons—the King of Blood Purifiers. DR. JOHN BULL’S VEGETABLE WORM DESTROYER is prepared in the form of eandy drops, attractive to tho sight and pleasant to the taste. DR. JOHN BULL’S SMITH’S TONIC SYRUP, BULL’S SARSAPARILLA, BULL’S WORM DESTROYER, The Popular Remedies of the Day.

Principal OOcs, 831 Uain St., LOUISVILLE, KT. Pain is supposed to lie the lot of us poor mortals, as Inevitable on rleatli, and llalilo at miy limelocdUfe upon us. The re lore it i< important tli.t remedial gout* should I, ■ a‘ hand to be used in an emergency, when we are inuile to feel the exonieistlng ugonies of pain, or the deptv siing influence of dise:ise. Surli a remedial agent exists in that old Reliable Family Remedy, > PERRY DAVIS’ Pain-Killer It was the first and is the only permanent Pain Reliever. (TS MERITS ARE UNSURPASSED. There if nothing to equal it. In i few momenta it •urea Colic, Cramps, Spasms, Heartburn, I)t----aniura, Dysentery, Flux, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache. It is found to OURE CHOLERA When all other Remedies fall. WHEN USED EXTERNALLY, AS A LINIMENT, .tollring given quicker ease in Burns, (flits. liuieus, Npruins. sting* ft-om lime t», and -cauls. It removes tho Are, and the wound heals ike ordinary spin». Those suffering with Rheumatism, Clout, or Neuralgia, if not a positive mire, they Ind the PAIN-KILLER gives them relief when no other remedy will. In sections of the country where FEVER AND AGUE Prevails there Is no remedy held in greater esteem. Persons traveling should keep if by them. SOLD BY ALL DRIJCCISTB.

LCADU olograph y or Sliort-Hand and Type bAIIR Writing I fore. Situations lurnisned. Address VALENTINE HBOB.. Jaiißsvllle. \Vi*._ COUNTRY NEWSPAPERS Supplied with partly-printed sheets In the most sutisfaefory manner. Hend for simple* and prices to THE NEWSPAPER UNION, No*. 271 and 2» Franklin Street, Chicago. FRAZER^, OTOot the Genuine. Sold Everywhere. Mme. L. LANCE’S i Any PR !BSi OR MU I SUPPORTER. with order. Bent by Mail In »ealed pk'g on rec’pt of price. /O. 704 Broadway, N. Y. City. ''lll / AGENTSJWANTKD. Nevspaper Oils Furnished upon short notice, at loweet prices and. easy terms. Also ail kinds of paper, cardboard and* nvelopo stock required in a printing office. . f Bend for Monthly Pric.-Ijst of Printing Material 1 Fr^r ß gc A M,^ PAPKR Catarrh hay * fever - I have suffered severefor the last ten years WbiPrAU rj/\\W^B frolU Hay-Fever in earjWr*r„ ®»M\lOT ly * n^mfd-*umineran4 n ROeMiDSPRES. l in the fall, 1 <,< ‘* lre V HAVFEVERMa /fMin favor of Ely's Cream JKiSalm. My short nee of mtt / gSß'i demonstrated its efy .Maidhof, 101 Cream Balm is a. ffltijJßEx <V' founded on a USA. 1 correct diagnosis of L| AYs. PPVE O tbls disease, and can r “ ~ ™*lE be depended upon,' •s#e. at dniggist'a- «oc. by mall. Sample bottle by n*U. 10c. ELY BROS.. Druggists, Owrego, N. Y. CThe Oldeit Medicine In the World 10 flit probably Dr. Isaac Thompson’s •lobrated Eye WateH K,MtsKssia*fl?s. o £ss?iKi sa eof this article Is constantly increasing, if the dfo' rect.ona are followed it wfll never tail. We parttctF larly invite (he attention of physicians to Its merits. John L. Thompson, sons ft Co., Trov. N. Y THE TIFFIN-SMS,*; i MACHINERY! Ai For Horse or Bteam Power If ? Hundreds of tlie best men in 80 States HI and Territories use it and will have no ■ other 1 “V RELIABLE! DURABLE! SIMPLE!H Established over 85 years,we have ample |H ' facilities to fill orders promptly, and Hf to aailsfactiou of our customers. Cata- Ml icgue tny.ir. AddraM • JMHmm A NYMAN, Xlflln. Ohio. hi BestCougkHyrup. Tastes good. M MUselnume. Wold by druggists. HH U-M- P. No. 38-84. WHEN WHITING TO .ADVERTISERS, * aar Jtltt Mw tb« advertisonumt